For many of you Future Salon regulars John Smart doesn't need an introduction. The Bay Area Future Salon is modeled after John's LA Futurists meetings that he was hosting for many years. Actually he came up from L.A. to kick off the first Future Salon and helped populate it with many of his connections.

Lately he had his head down writing his book. This is why I am extra happy that he takes a brake to introduce his current big picture thinking at our next Future Salon on Friday the 17th of April.(6-7 networking 7-9pm talk/conversation). Free and open to the public please RSVPhttp://budurl.com/jcp7/d so we know how many people to expect.

P.S. Extra special treat: Iveta and John are having a Post-Talk Party at their place in Mountain View (216 Mountain View Ave) "from 9:30pm to Whenever" for any folks who want to hang out on couches after the Salon
and get to know their fellow futurist friends on a more informal basis.
We will have drinks and some snacks but people are always welcome to
bring more if they would like.

Evo Devo Universe? A Framework for Thinking About the Future

Abstract: Biological systems
evolve, and they also develop. These two processes are very
different, but they are both necessary for life and intelligence to
exist. While evolution (“evo”) is famously unpredictable,
many aspects of development (“devo”) are quite
predictable. For example, if you have a sense of what stage a
developing system is at in its ‘replication’ cycle
(birth, growth, reproduction, aging, or recycling), you have a pretty
good idea what stage is coming next. Organic molecules also evolve
and replicate/develop. So do stars, and their dependent planets. In
fact, that’s how our own life-generating solar system came to
exist, through a long process of stellar “evolutionary
development” (reproduction of progressively more chemically
complex solar systems) in our galaxy. Ideas or ‘memes,’
which replicate between human brains, also evolve and develop. So do
technologies, which replicate in cultures. There is some evidence
that even our universe itself may replicate, evolve, and develop,
according to some of the new cosmologists.